For the purpose of these regulations, the following definitions shall apply:
Alternate orientation.A structure, which is located on a corner lot, and faces a street frontage other than the front lot line.
Approved decorative fencing materials.A decorative fence may be constructed of wood pickets, lattice work, decorative metal, masonry, stone, PVC fencing or any material approved by the administrative official. Chain-link, barbed wire, and other similar materials shall not constitute approved decorative fencing materials.
Approved fencing materials.A fence may be constructed of wood pickets, lattice work, decorative metal, masonry, stone, pvc fencing, chain-link, wrought iron, privacy panels, pressure-treated timber, plaster, or any material approved by the administrative official.
Corner lot.A lot, tract or parcel, which has a longer street frontage as the side lot, and is adjacent to the intersection of two (2) streets.
Decorative fence.A fence constructed for aesthetic purposes, which is constructed of approved decorative fencing material.
Dog run.A temporary/movable enclosure intended for holding dogs and other animals for any length of time.
Electric fence.An outdoor area enclosure that uses electric shocks to deter animals or people from crossing. An electric pet collar, sometimes referred to as an Invisible Fence®, is not a type of electric fence.
Fence.An outdoor area enclosure that is constructed of approved fencing material, such as wood, chain-link, wrought iron or lattice. Structures with an average construction thickness of three (3) inches or more are walls.
Front yard.A lot’s portion between the required front yard setback(s) and the property line(s) adjacent to the street right-of-way or access easement.
Interior lot.A lot, tract or parcel that is between one (1) or more lots, tracts or parcels. A lot, tract or parcel that abuts the intersection of two (2) streets is a corner lot.
Key lot.An interior lot that has a side lot line adjacent to the rear lot line of one (1) or more lots, tracts or parcels.
Office park enclosure.A wall that is constructed of approved fencing materials, such as masonry, pressure-treated timber, plaster or iron and encloses an office, business or industrial park complex. An office park enclosure, which may include entry features, shall only be erected along the perimeters of platted nonresidential subdivisions containing four (4) or more lots.
Outdoor area enclosure.A fence, wall or barrier that is constructed of approved fencing material and encloses an outdoor area.
Rear lot line.The boundary line of any lot, tract or parcel that is on the opposite side of the front lot line and serves as the rear property boundary.
Residential subdivision enclosures (including subdivision entry features).A wall that is constructed of approved fencing materials, such as masonry, pressure-treated timber, plaster or iron and encloses a residential subdivision. A residential subdivision enclosure, which may include subdivision entry features, shall only be erected along the perimeters of platted residential subdivisions containing ten (10) or more lots.
Side lot line.The boundary line of any lot, tract or parcel that extends from the front lot line to the rear lot line and serves as the side property boundary.
SPA, non-self contained.A hydro-massage pool or tub for recreational or therapeutic use, not located in health-care facilities, designed for immersion of users and usually having a filter, heater and motor-driven blower. A spa may be installed indoors, outdoors, on the ground, on a supporting structure, in the ground or in a supporting structure. A non-self-contained spa is intended for recreational bathing and contains water over 24 inches deep.
SPA, self-contained.A continuous duty appliance in which all control, water heating and water circulating equipment is an integral part of the product, located entirely under the spa skirt. A self-contained spa is intended for recreational bathing and contains water over 24 inches deep.
Swimming pool.Any structure intended for swimming or recreation that has a depth of over 24 inches deep, including in-ground, aboveground, and on-ground swimming pools, fixed in place wading pools, hot tubs, and spas.
Swimming pool enclosure.An outdoor area enclosure made of approved fencing material that obstructs access to a swimming pool.
Visibility triangle.An area located at the intersection of two (2) streets, access easements or alleys or any combination thereof where no structure, growth or object shall exceed two (2) feet in height, created by measuring 25 feet from the rights-of-way intersection along each right-of-way (ROW).
Wall.An outdoor area enclosure of approved fencing material, such as plaster, or wood that has an average construction thickness exceeding three (3) inches. Structures with an average construction thickness less than three (3) inches are fences.
(Ordinance 474-2009 adopted 2/26/09)